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  • 17
    Dec
    2012
    9:01am, EST

    Police: Suspected far-right plot to bomb South Africa president, ANC party foiled

    /

    Delegates from the African National Congress attend the nomination session of their party meeting in Bloemfontein, South Africa, on Dec. 17.

    By Reuters

    BLOEMFONTEIN, South Africa -- South African police said Monday they had foiled a plot by suspected right-wing Afrikaner extremists targeting an African National Congress (ANC) conference attended by President Jacob Zuma and dozens of top government officials.

    Four men aged between 40 and 50 were arrested Sunday. A police spokesman told Reuters there was evidence they were planning acts around the country and not just at the ANC meeting in the central city of Bloemfontein.



    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The vast majority of South Africa's whites accepted the ANC's victory in the 1994 election that brought Nelson Mandela to power and ended decades of white-minority rule. However, a tiny handful continues to oppose the historic settlement.

    "Their acts are widespread. We arrested them in different provinces," spokesman Billy Jones said.

    ANC spokesman Keith Khoza said preliminary information suggested the men were planning to bomb the marquee where Zuma and 4,500 delegates are holding a five-day meeting to chose the ANC's leadership for the next five years.

    "This would have been an act of terrorism that South Africa can ill afford," Khoza said.

    'Who is my Mandela?' South Africans consider icon's place in a changing world

    AFP / Getty Images

    South African President Jacob Zuma attends the second day of the annual meeting of the African National Congress in Bloemfontein on Dec. 17.

    Party denies link
    The Federal Freedom Party, a fringe group that campaigns for self-determination for the white Afrikaner minority, confirmed two of those arrested were party members, but denied any role in the suspected plot.

    "We were not involved and do not associate ourselves with their actions," national secretary Francois Cloete said.

    In July, a former university lecturer was found guilty of orchestrating a 2002 plot to overthrow the ANC and assassinate Mandela -- now 94 and receiving treatment in a Pretoria hospital for a lung infection.

    There was a heavy security presence at the Bloemfontein meeting and the few vehicles allowed onto the university campus hosting the event were being searched by police and sniffer dogs.

    Complete World coverage on NBCNews.com

    The conference is set to give Zuma a second mandate to lead the party and -- given the ANC's dominance at the ballot box -- another five-year term in 2014 as president of Africa's biggest economy.

    Slideshow: Nelson Mandela: A revolutionary's life

    /

    View images of civil rights leader Nelson Mandela, who went from anti-apartheid activist to prisoner to South Africa's first black president.

    Launch slideshow

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Conservatives sweep to power in faltering Japan
    • Luxury perfume makers create stink over Europe allergy laws
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    • 'Who is my Mandela?' South Africans consider icon's place in a changing world
    • Google+ Hangout from Egypt with NBC News' Ayman Mohyeldin

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    3 comments

    gd stonepipe Agreed.

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    Explore related topics: south-africa, african-national-congress, apartheid, featured, anc, jacob-zuma, federal-freedom-party
  • 30
    Nov
    2012
    10:55am, EST

    Killings of white farmers highlight toxic apartheid legacy in South Africa

    By Reuters

    ERMELO, South Africa -- In a country cursed by one of the world's highest murder rates, being a white farmer makes a violent death an even higher risk.

    Whether attacks have been motivated by race or robbery, a rising death rate from rural homicides is drawing attention to the lack of change on South Africa's farms nearly two decades after the end of apartheid -- and to the tensions burgeoning over enduring racial inequality.

    Some of South Africa's predominantly white commercial farmers go as far as to brand the farm killings a genocide.

    'Potentially explosive' issue
    On the other side of the divide, populists are seizing on the discontent among the black majority to demand a forced redistribution of white-owned farms along the lines of neighboring Zimbabwe.

    "The issue is potentially explosive," said Lechesa Tsenoli, deputy minister for land reform, arguing that South Africa's future depends on ending inequality on the farms.

    The economic change promised by Nelson Mandela's African National Congress (ANC) when white-minority rule ended in 1994 has been even slower in the countryside than in cities and mines, where at least small elites of black South Africans have prospered.


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    Land ownership ratios are little changed from 1913, when the Natives' Land Act set aside 87 percent of land for whites. Meanwhile, black farm workers are among South Africa's poorest.

    But life is getting more uncomfortable for the white farmers, too. Their number is down a third, to some 40,000, in the past 15 years. Headlines about the farm killings are another incentive to sell.

    For while South Africa's overall annual murder rate has more than halved since the end of apartheid to around 32 people per 100,000, figures for commercial farmers show a near 50 percent rise to an average rate of some 290 per 100,000 a year in the five years to 2011.

    Shot through the neck and chest
    Shot at his home by black attackers two years ago, 34-year-old Johan Scholtz believes he was the victim of a racially motivated attack rather than a robbery.

    PhotoBlog: Violent labor strikes expand to South Africa farms

    "I was shot through my neck, I was shot through my chest and as I fell to the ground they came and stood over me and they shot again -- two times -- just missed my brain," Scholtz said, fighting back tears as he recalled the incident.

    "My sheep were there around the house, they could've taken the sheep. My house was open, they could've easily gone in. But they left with nothing," he said, adding that the family did not own much worth stealing.

    Scholtz now keeps a baseball bat by his bed at his livestock farm in Ermelo, in the undulating veld some 140 miles east of Johannesburg. He is asking himself how long he will stay in the business.

    NBC's Ron Allen asked three students from the University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg for their impressions of South Africa's past  -- and if they feel  positive about their own futures.  

    Despite the ANC's pledge to build a "rainbow nation," South Africa's income disparity -- which had already been among the top few in the world -- has widened further since apartheid ended, according to World Bank figures.

    South Africa launches new Nelson Mandela bank notes

    Among the very poorest are the black farm workers, suffering not only from the economic hardship, but -- all too often -- a brand of racial abuse unchanged since the end of white rule.

    "For farm workers at the bottom like me, we are not allowed to talk to farm owners directly," complained one 28-year-old fruit farm worker from the northeastern Limpopo province, asking that he be called only by his first name, Frans.

    Mandela's 'Rainbow Nation' determined to succeed

    "The farmers disrespect us to a point they would use the 'K-word,'" he said. The "K-word" is "kaffir," apartheid-era slang for a black person and highly offensive.

    While wages for most workers have increased steadily since apartheid, they have risen more slowly for farm workers -- who earn only 10 to 30 percent of a typical factory worker's wage. About half those in rural areas live on less than $3 a day.

    Anger has boiled over in violent strikes in recent weeks in the Cape Town wine region, where thousands of farm workers demand a doubling in wages from about $8 a day.

    The South African politician blamed for inflaming the miners' strikes there told NBC News that the treatment of the poor is worse now than it was under apartheid. Julius Malema, - expelled from the ruling African National Congress for his radical views - says he wants to spread the chaos, that left 34 miners dead. NBC's Rohit Kachroo reports.

    Study: Robbery, not race, the biggest motive
    The motive for nearly 90 percent of farm attacks was robbery rather than race, according to the biggest government study on the subject, published nearly a decade ago.

    "There might be segments within the South African population that would like to use words such as genocide, but farm attacks are a result of criminal activities," said Andre Botha of Agri SA, the largest farmers' union, which points out that the small number of black commercial farmers are also victims of crime.

    Cops shoot dead 7 robbers in South Africa

    "It's an obvious result of the lifestyle that we chose. Farms are a soft target," he said.

    Disentangling motives is no easy task, however, in a society where whites have the vast majority of the wealth on display and the history of discrimination can add another edge to attacks on isolated homesteads.

    On Wednesday, Nelson Mandela celebrated his 94th birthday, another remarkable accomplishment after enduring so much in the name of freedom. Two decades after the end of apartheid in South Africa the divide between the rich and poor is still strikingly visible, but today's young adults have great hopes for the future. NBC's Ron Allen reports.

    "Sometimes it degenerates into racial conflict," said Johan Burger of the Institute for Security Studies, who has been studying farm violence for more than a decade.

    When white supremacist leader Eugene Terre'blanche was hacked to death by two farm workers in 2010, racial motives were suspected, but it turned out to have been caused by a wage dispute.

    Complete Africa coverage on NBCNews.com

    The racial discontent on the farms has also become an element in the political equation at a time of tensions over wildcat mineworkers' strikes and factional struggles within the ruling ANC.

    'Shoot the Boer' rhetoric
    Before being told to stop by the courts, populist leader Julius Malema stirred up crowds with his singing of "Shoot the Boer" --deepening unease among whites in a country where the Afrikaans word for farmer is synonymous with the people who make up most of the 10 percent white minority.

    Secretary of State Clinton tells of the important life lessons she has learned through her friendship with Nelson Mandela.

    Although the ANC has decided to drop the apartheid-era song after firing Malema as its youth leader, the affair has pushed race further onto the political agenda.

    AfriForum, a vocal advocacy group for Afrikaans-speakers -- who descend mostly from Dutch and French settlers -- blames the song in part for the rise in crimes against farmers as it catalogues murders, rapes and other attacks.

    "The amount of violence is horrific," said AfriForum's Ernst Roets.

    Voice of hate or hero? S. Africa's downtrodden workers put faith in Malema

    Meanwhile, Malema and the ANC's youth wing are demanding that white-owned land be turned over to black South Africans.

    For radicals, Zimbabwe's experience set a good example to follow -- even though the forced seizures of land helped push South Africa's neighbor into nearly a decade of economic decline.

    Slideshow: Nelson Mandela: A revolutionary's life

    /

    View images of civil rights leader Nelson Mandela, who went from anti-apartheid activist to prisoner to South Africa's first black president.

    Launch slideshow

    According to a plan drawn up under Mandela, 30 percent of farmland was meant to be handed to black South Africans by 2014. Only 8 percent has been transferred, however, and the government is now reviewing the plan.

    Complete World coverage on NBCNews.com

    The direct economic impact of any radical change in land ownership might be less dramatic in South Africa than in Zimbabwe because farming accounts for only about 3 percent of gross domestic product rather than 20 percent.

    But no matter how it is addressed, the potential for growing confrontation over race and land raises another dangerous prospect for Africa's biggest economy.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Fast cars go cheap as bubble bursts in 'China's Dubai'
    • Leveson report on Rupert Murdoch, son: Evidence suggests 'cover-up'
    • ANALYSIS: UN's Palestinian statehood vote is victory for Abbas
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    • Arafat's exhumation: Palestinians' desire for truth might be dashed again
    • Chinese paper falls for Onion 'sexiest man alive' spoof

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    89 comments

    Like Detroit, any white folk left in S. Africa are at risk. But remember, according to race hucksters, only whites can be racist.

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  • 12
    Oct
    2012
    12:19pm, EDT

    Struggle of South Africa's ANC descends into a deadly scramble for spoils

    Rogan Ward / Reuters

    African National Congress supporters leave the Durban Magistrates Court, where a man accused of murdering ANC councilor Mthembeni Shezi appeared Thursday for his trial.

    By Reuters

    WELBEDACHT, South Africa -- Mthembeni Shezi, a local African National Congress councilor in the run-down suburb of Welbedacht on South Africa's east coast, was wrapping up a routine meeting last month when two men barged in, sprayed the room with gunfire and shot him five times in the chest.

    "It was like a movie. The men just shot indiscriminately. It was scary. Everyone panicked. We hit the floor. I didn't think I would come out of there alive," said one woman present, who remains too frightened to reveal her name.

    "The gunmen seemed to know who they wanted," she said said.

    Far from being a movie, the hit represents the bloody reality of local politics for some in the African National Congress (ANC), and shows how far Nelson Mandela's 100-year-old liberation movement has strayed from the moral high ground it occupied when it came to power 18 years ago.


    Rare since the advent of democracy in 1994, political murders within the ruling party have soared in the last 18 months, with local officials turning on each other in a dog-eat-dog scramble for the spoils of power.

    President Jacob Zuma, who came to office in 2009, has pledged to crack down on corruption, but watchdog Transparency International suggests South Africa is sliding down the ranks, from 38th in the world in 2001 to 64th in 2011.

    Bloodshed
    As the level of corruption has risen, so has the carnage at the party's grass roots.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    In Zuma's home province of KwaZulu Natal, 38 ANC members have been killed since February 2011, according to an internal party investigation. By comparison, the previous three years saw only just over 10 politically-linked murders in the region.

    At the funeral of a prominent ANC official killed in a drive-by shooting in July, Zuma blamed the killings on "some forces of darkness ... bent on dividing our movement."

    Even though Africa's biggest economy has been struggling since a 2008-09 recession and the Treasury is trying to keep a lid on spending, local councils remain awash with cash ear-marked for roads, houses, water and electricity to redress the inequalities of decades of underspending under apartheid.

    Platinum mining firm fires 12,000 strikers in South Africa

    Exact reasons for the sharp rise in levels of corruption and the attendant killings are hard to pin down. But the sluggish recovery from the recession means there are fewer money-making options elsewhere and it also seems that the word has got out that local officialdom is the way to riches.

    There are also plenty of examples at the top of the ANC. Zuma was accused and never fully exonerated of receiving backhanders from a 1997 arms deal. Former ANC youth leader Julius Malema has been charged with money laundering.

    According to his friends, the 38-year-old Shezi, who died of his wounds a day later in hospital, became a target because he was one of the few straight ones.

    "People hated him because he was fighting corruption," his fiancée, Buyi Tshabalala, told Reuters. "He was in constant fear that he would be killed."

    Factbox: South Africa since apartheid

    Others contend that Shezi's lifestyle was too flashy for someone on a local councilor's salary. Those who attended the meeting at which he was shot believe his killing resulted from a dispute related to his job.

    Slideshow: Nelson Mandela: A revolutionary's life

    /

    View images of civil rights leader Nelson Mandela, who went from anti-apartheid activist to prisoner to South Africa's first black president.

    Launch slideshow

    'Better life for some'
    Reuters has spoken to eight ANC officials in KwaZulu Natal, who said politicians and officials were dying in battles for council positions that give access to lucrative government contracts.

    Such killings have been recorded in all of South Africa's nine provinces -- in July, for instance, the mayor of the northwest city of Rustenburg was convicted for ordering the murder of a rival councilor.

    But Zuma's back yard, historically the wild and untamed home of the Zulus, has been hit hardest.

    In an episode typical of the violence in the province, an ANC branch chairman, Dumisani Malunga, was killed in August in a hit organized by a rival, Sifiso Khumalo.

    "There was absolutely no justification for you to eliminate him by the barrel of a gun to prevent him from vying for the position as ward councilor," the judge said in sentencing Khumalo to 22 years in jail for masterminding the killing.

    'Murder on a massive scale': Angry fallout from S. Africa mine shootings

    With an ANC leadership race coming up in December, few expect Zuma to crack down for fear of alienating supporters and damaging his chances of re-election as head of the party and, by extension, securing a second term as national president in 2014.

    "Having ANC membership is the best CV in town. The higher you go in the party, the more you can dish out patronage. It's about taking care of yourself and those close to you," said a member of the ANC's National Executive Committee, its highest decision-making body.

    Complete African coverage on NBCNews.com

    "It's no longer about the ANC slogan 'A better life for all'. It's now about a better life for some," said the official, who asked not to be named. "People are reducing the ANC to their personal kitty and are prepared to kill to get their slice of the wealth."

    From poverty to 'a fancy 4x4 and several houses'?
    Much of the problem lies with local government, with a staggering 95 percent of municipal administrations being unable to account for their receipts and spending, according to the Auditor General.

    Many councilors -- Shezi included -- come from impoverished backgrounds and some are barely educated. For some, having control of hundreds of millions of rand a year with little oversight is too great a temptation.

    "There are as many bad things to say about Shezi as there are good. People look at his lifestyle and ask: 'How does a herd boy from Nkandla go from having absolutely nothing to a fancy 4X4 and several houses?'" an ANC official in nearby Durban said.

    The ANC has spent billions of dollars fighting poverty since the birth of the "Rainbow Nation" in 1994, and has made enormous strides in providing electricity, running water and housing to the poor.

    Complete World coverage on NBCNews.com

    It has also seen enormous sums lost at the local level where checks are fewer and prosecutions rare for officials suspected of lining their pockets.

    "People start to see that being a local councilor can be a means to acquire wealth," the Durban official said.

    As the corruption has soared, so too have the protests by blacks living in shanty towns around major cities with no power, running water or job prospects. From just a few dozen a year under former President Thabo Mbeki, they are now a daily occurrence.

    The anger is unlikely to translate into a loss of power any time soon for the ANC, which continues to win support on the back of its role in ending apartheid. It was more than 40 percentage points ahead of its nearest rival in 2011 elections.

    However, there is a risk of the greed and cynicism tearing the party apart and, at least in KwaZulu Natal, rendering the province ungovernable.

    "If the situation is not controlled now, we run the risk of reverting to the early 1990s, when the province was wracked by political violence," said Kwanele Ncale, a spokesman for the team investigating Shezi's killing.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Pakistan: 3 arrested over teen peace activist shooting
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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    13 comments

    I'm sure the Boers and old colonials (those still alive) are tsk-tsking about how Africans still can't rule themselves. Democracy isn't very democratic.

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  • 10
    Sep
    2012
    5:22am, EDT

    Voice of hate or hero? South Africa's downtrodden workers put faith in Malema

    The South African politician blamed for inflaming the miners' strikes there told NBC News that the treatment of the poor is worse now than it was under apartheid. Julius Malema -- expelled from the ruling African National Congress for his radical views -- says he wants to spread the chaos that left 34 miners dead. NBC's Rohit Kachroo reports.

    By Rohit Kachroo, NBC News

    JOHANNESBURG, South Africa -- The sky over the Marikana mine turns a murky shade. The euphoric chanting of its striking workforce begins to dim. Hail stones, the size of golf balls, pelt the crowd.

    Many of the men shield their faces and race for cover underneath the corrugated iron roofs of their modest shacks, some slipping on the muddy ground as they run.

    Julius Malema, the expelled youth leader of the African National Congress, had been due to address the crowd of striking platinum mine workers about their demand for higher pay. But the rally is called off because of the dreadful conditions.

    It feels like only Mother Nature could have prevented the striking miners from seeing their hero.

    Malema was the youth leader of South Africa’s ruling party, the African National Congress, until he was expelled for indiscipline. Some see him as a dangerous agitator and a threat to the country's delicate racial harmony. He was convicted of hate speech for singing a so-called "struggle song" called "Shoot the Boer," translated as "shoot the white farmer."


    But he is also hailed as a mouthpiece for the boiling anger of many poor, black South Africans frustrated by the pace of progress since the birth of democracy in 1994.

    Africa's Rainbow Nation troubled by racist time warp

    Under apartheid, the white minority institutionalized political and economic discrimination against the black majority. This system of racial segregation was in place for nearly half a century, until Nelson Mandela's African National Congress won multiracial democratic elections 18 years ago. The party has ruled South Africa ever since.

    Slideshow: Nelson Mandela: A revolutionary's life

    /

    View images of civil rights leader Nelson Mandela, who went from anti-apartheid activist to prisoner to South Africa's first black president.

    Launch slideshow

    An hour's drive from the Marikana mine, at a provincial courthouse, the storm cloud has yet to strike. Here, a group of workers have just been released from prison. They parade through the streets to celebrate their liberty. They chant Malema's nickname, "JuJu," and sing derogatory songs about President Jacob Zuma as they march.

    Painting over a presidential penis: Sign of respect for Zuma or vandalism?

    They are among the 270 mine workers who escaped the bullets when police opened fire during a strike last month, only to then be charged with the murder of 34 of their colleagues who were killed. In one of many echoes of the past to emerge from the massacre, the men were accused under an apartheid-era law that the white minority regime once used to criminalize entire crowds of black protesters. The charges were later withdrawn.

    'Murder on a massive scale': Angry fallout from S. Africa mine shootings

    The freed men say they will return to the mine to demand higher wages and to protest against the way in which the wealth of South Africa's vast natural resources is carved up.

    "We will shout and strike for better pay -- and for JuJu," freed miner Mishack Mzilikazi says.

    'We will never retreat'
    Malema has promised to make the mines of South Africa "ungovernable," unless workers are paid more.

    "It is a struggle the mineworkers are prepared to die for," Malema told NBC News at his home in Johannesburg.

    "We should be inspired by those comrades who were killed at Marikana to now begin to demand 12,500 (South African rand per month, or about $1,500) for each mine worker. That should serve as a source of inspiration to intensify the struggle for better salaries," he says.

    Felix Dlangamandla / Gallo Images via Getty Images

    Julius Malema, third from right, joins miners at a march following a memorial service held for colleagues who were killed and injured during clashes with police on August 23.

     "If they respond with death, we will never retreat. We will soldier on until our demands are met," Malema says.

    Police officers have been accused of torturing some of the men. The allegations sound like they could have come from the dark days of white minority rule.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "They will never kill all the mineworkers. It is not practically possible unless they are prepared to face charges of genocide," Malema told NBC News.

    "For every revolution there are casualties. ... We lost many great people during the apartheid struggle," he adds.

    For Malema, the strike illustrates the plight of poor, black South Africans -- the enduring "economic apartheid." He believes that many black people are worse off now, under democracy, than they were under apartheid.

    "One of the white chaps was trying to make a joke to me and said, 'Had we known that it was going to be this nice for us as white South Africans, we would have fought for this democracy long before 1994,'" he says.

    "The conditions for our people are worsening. The gap between the rich and the poor has widened," Malema adds.

    Stark inequality
    Malema, 31, has little memory of the darkest days of apartheid. But he claims to represent the rage of a generation of young black people who never experienced white minority rule, yet endure its grim legacy.

    Although most people accept that "The Rainbow Nation" is a work-in-progress, many have grown tired of the slow pace of change in one of the most unequal societies in the world.

    South Africa enters adulthood as 'born frees' come of age

    The World Bank released a report in July that warned that slow job growth and deep economic inequality posed a threat to South Africa's stability. The country's official unemployment rate stands at 25 percent, but is believed to be much higher among young black men.

    Malema believes that the nationalization of the country’s mines might be one solution to the gap between rich and poor, white and black.

    Factbox: South Africa since apartheid

    But many disillusioned South Africans aim their fire at the rich, black political elite as much as they do at white executives.

    Malema is certainly wealthy. But he sees no contradiction in the fact that we are sat inside his designer suburban home as we discuss the plight of the poor.

    "You do not have to be poor to understand the poor," he says.

    Memorial services scheduled for the 34 South African platinum miners gunned down by police. The country's embattled leader, President Jacob Zuma, visited the mine, promising a full judicial enquiry while reassuring international investors that South Africa was open for business. But the price of platinum on world markets surged -- as reports suggested strikes were spreading to other mines. Inigo Gilmore, Channel 4 Europe reports.

    To many of his critics, Malema represents another ghastly aspect of public life in South Africa: corruption. An inquiry into allegations of fraud and tax evasion is close to completion.

    "I've never done anything wrong," he says, defending himself against constant claims in the local media.

    Complete World coverage on NBCNews.com

    "Let them (the prosecution authorities) bring those charges. ... Because it would give us an opportunity now to answer for ourselves, because I’ve been (tried) in the media, I've been convicted in the media, found guilty and sentenced for life for corruption. But I was never afforded an opportunity to answer for myself," Malema says.

    Malema's supporters believe that political pressure is being placed upon the investigating authorities in an attempt to embarrass him.

     "This is a government that likes to attack. ... Marikana has shown that. But things must change," he says.

    "Violence comes with government. Government is very violent under President Zuma. It is a violent government, it is a murderous government," Malema says.

    "We will not be silenced. People must have change. We want equality. We must have our country back."

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    103 comments

    the SA version of Jeese Jackson/Al Sharpton...hope it works better for you then it did/does in the USA.what i find amazing and sad is that when the "white' farmers ran the farms they actually could export food...now the "black" run farms can't even feed themselves.didn't like what apartheid stood fo …

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